Vulcan Last Co. v. State

217 N.W. 412, 194 Wis. 636, 1928 Wisc. LEXIS 39
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 217 N.W. 412 (Vulcan Last Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vulcan Last Co. v. State, 217 N.W. 412, 194 Wis. 636, 1928 Wisc. LEXIS 39 (Wis. 1928).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

The offense of which defendants were found guilty is defined by sec. 103.18, Stats., as follows :

“No person shall, by threatening to discharge a person from his employment or threatening to reduce the wages of a person or by promising to give employment at higher wages to a person, attempt to influence a qualified voter to give or withhold his vote at an election.”

This section is a part of the chapter of the statutes devoted to the protection of the rights of employees. The offense defined by this section is not one against elections. It is an offense against employees. The indictment does not charge an offense against the election laws. The offense charged is that of attempting unlawfully to interfere with the right of every freeman to cast his vote as the dictates of his own conscience shall determine, untrammeled by influence exerted by his employer.

The evidence establishes the fact that these threats were made in an attempt to influence the employees of the Vulcan Last Company to give their votes for the waterworks bonds at an election which was in fact held at a later date. That constituted an offense under the statutes. One who violates this statute cannot escape liability for his unlawful acts by a collateral attack upon the election because the proof does not affirmatively show that every step required by the statutes in the calling of the election was in fact taken.

The cases on which the defendants rely are all decisions involving offenses against election laws. None of them consider such an offense as that here charged, which is an offense against the rights of employees.

The referendum upon the question of issuing bonds for the construction of the waterworks was “an election.” “An ‘election,’ within the meaning of the statutes of this state, includes a referendum vote to decide a question of policy such as the issuance of bonds, . . . just as well as it includes an ordinary election to choose between candidates [640]*640for public office. The very first definition given of the word in Brown v. Phillips (71 Wis. 239, 36 N. W. 242) is ‘the act of choosing; choice.’ Whether it is a choice between alternative policies or a choice between persons, it is equally an election. If further argument were needed on this proposition it would be readily found in the fact that such referendum votes are always termed ‘elections’ by our statutes.” Hall v. Madison, 128 Wis. 132, 137, 138, 107 N. W. 31.

As was so aptly said by the trial court: “This court can perceive no distinction between that case and this. The fact that this is a criminal case does not authorize the court to place a different construction upon the same provision of the statute. This court has no sympathy with the idea of so construing a statute as to make it impotent so far as criminal prosecution is concerned while making it perfectly valid so far as civil rights are concerned.”

The fact that the election had not been formally called and the notice of election posted when the threat to discharge was made does not relieve defendants from liability. The election had been provided for and it was in fact held. Defendants’ contention was effectively disposed of by the trial court when it said: “It can be no less an offense to exercise influence by threats immediately before the posting of notice of election than to do the same act immediately after the posting of notice of election.”

The gist of the offense defined by sec. 103.18 of the Statutes is the attempt by threats or promises to influence a voter “to give or withhold his vote at an election.” The language just quoted was chosen with care so that it would not penalize any employer who attempts to1 influence his men to perform their duty as citizens by going ft> the polls to cast their ballots, provided that no attempt is made to control their choice when the ballots are cast. The thing that was safeguarded was the untrammeled right of the electors to [641]*641vote for such men and for such measures as they desire to support. The thing that was prohibited was the attempt to impose the will of the employer upon the employee when the latter was determining whether he would “give or withhold his vote” for any candidate or for any measure submitted to the electors for approval.

No offense under the statute is committed unless the. employer, by threats to discharge or to reduce wages or by promising employment at higher wages, attempts to influence his employee to give his vote for a particular man or measure or to withhold his vote from any man or measure either by voting for another candidate or by voting against a given measure or by absenting himself from the polls entirely.

It would be difficult to stage a scene which would impress the minds of the men more forcibly with the threat to discharge if they did not vote for the waterworks bonds than that which was enacted before them, which ended with the dramatic discharge of the offending employee who had voted against the interests of the company in the meeting of the common council on the previous evening.

The only question that remains for consideration is whether the Vulcan Last Company was properly convicted of a violation of the statute. “Some of the earlier writers on common law held the law to be that a corporation could not commit a crime. It is said to have been held by Lord Chief Justice Holt (Anonymous, 12 Modern, 559) that ‘a corporation is not indictable, although the particular members of it are.’ In Blackstone’s Commentaries, ch. 18, §ec. 12, we find it stated: ‘A corporation cannot commit treason, or felony, or other crime in its corporate capacity, though its members may in their distinct individual capacities.’ The modern authority, universally, so far as we know, is the other way. In considering the subject, Bishop’s New Criminal Law, § 417, devotes a chapter to the capac[642]*642ity of corporations to commit crime, and states the law to be: ‘S.ince a corporation acts by it's officers and agents, their purposes, motives, and intent are just as much those of the corporation as are the things done. If, for example, the invisible, intangible essence of air, which we term a corporation, can level mountains, fill up valleys, lay down iron tracks, and run railroad cars on them, it can intend to do it, and can act therein as well viciously as virtuously.’ ” New York Cent. & H. R. R. Co. v. U. S. 212 U. S. 481, 492, 493, 29 Sup. Ct. 304. See, also, People v. Rochester R. & L. Co. 195 N. Y. 102, 88 N. E. 22.

The ever-increasing use of the corporate form of management in business and industrial enterprises made necessary this change in the ancient rule that a corporation was incapable of committing crime. “It is true that there are some crimes which in their nature cannot be committed by corporations. But there is a large class of offenses, . . . wherein the crime consists in purposely doing the things prohibited by statute. In that class of crimes we see no good reason why corporations may not be held responsible for and charged with the knowledge and purposes of théir agents, acting within the authority conferred upon them. ...

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Bluebook (online)
217 N.W. 412, 194 Wis. 636, 1928 Wisc. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vulcan-last-co-v-state-wis-1928.